holographic platform-1

Digital Holographic Technology Platform
Digital holography technology, as the name suggests, is the use of photoelectric sensing devices (such as CCD or CMOS) to record holograms, and through computer simulation of optical diffraction processes to achieve holographic reconstruction and processing of the recorded object. This technology was first proposed by J. W. Goodman and Lawrence in the late 1960s, inheriting the characteristics of traditional optical holography and developing many advantages on this basis.

The core of the digital holographic technology platform lies in interferometric recording and diffraction reconstruction. In the interference recording stage, use photoelectric sensing devices to record the interference fringes between the reference light wave and the object light wave; In the diffraction reconstruction stage, no optical system is required, but the diffraction process is simulated using a computer to digitally reconstruct the original object.

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